Opinion
(August Term, 1848.)
1. Where there was a deed in trust upon land and negroes for the satisfaction of certain enumerated creditors, and another creditor obtained a judgment before a justice against the debtor and levied on his interest in the property, but did not have the execution returned to court and a venditioni awarded, and where the personal estate was exhausted in the payment of the creditors secured in the deed, but there remained a surplus in the hands of the trustee from the sale of the land: Held, that the levy of the justice's execution on the land created no lien so as to entitle that creditor to be paid in preference to other creditors who had received subsequent assignments from the debtor.
2. To create such a lien and enforce it, it is indispensable that there should be effectual process, such as will enable the creditor to make a sale of the property.
APPEAL from the Court of Equity of LINCOLN, at Spring Term, 1848.
Guion for plaintiffs.
Thompson and Avery for defendants.
The plaintiffs are creditors of Rouche by judgments rendered by a justice of the peace; and on 16 February, 1846, executions were sued out thereon, and on the same day the constable made a levy and return thereof in the following words: "Levied this execution on the defendant's interest in a house and lot in the southeast square of Lincolnton, also on two negroes, Rody and Caroline, and household and kitchen furniture, under deed of trust to William Lander, trustee." The executions, judgments, and the other papers were returned to the ensuing county court in March. In August, 1843, Rouche conveyed to the other defendant, Lander, the house and lot, negroes and furniture levied on, (252) and also other things, upon trust to sell and out of the proceeds pay certain enumerated debts. Afterwards Rouche paid a considerable part of the debts, leaving the balance due less than the value of the negroes and the price they brought, at the sale hereinafter mentioned: on 19 and 20 February, 1846, Rouche drew and Lander accepted orders for divers sums of money to be paid out of the surplus of the proceeds of sale, after discharging the debts therein secured; and on Tuesday of the March County Court Lander sold all the property, when the slaves and other chattels brought more than enough to discharge the debts mentioned in the deed. But the trustee claimed the surplus and also the proceeds of the house and lot as applicable to the said orders so drawn on him and accepted by him. The bill was filed in March, 1847, and states that, in consequence of the sales by the trustee, the plaintiffs were advised that it was unnecessary for them to obtain orders of sale or writs of venditioni exponas, to sell the house and lot, and, accordingly, no further proceedings were had on the levies and returns. The bill charges, nevertheless, that the levies and returns created a lien at law upon the interest of Rouche in the real property, and, as the fund arising from the personalty was more than sufficient to discharge the secured debts, that the trustee was bound to apply that accordingly and leave the realty for the satisfaction of the plaintiffs, and that, by virtue of the lien of their executions, the plaintiffs are entitled to satisfaction in preference to the creditors, who obtained the orders subsequently to the plaintiffs' levies.
The answers do not materially vary the statements of the bill and submit the question of preference between plaintiffs and defendants to the court. Upon a hearing on the circuit, the court declared that the plaintiffs obtained a lien on the estate or interest of Rouche in the house and lot by the levies of the executions and returns, and that, as all the debts secured in the deed of trust were satisfied or might (253) be satisfied out of the residue of the fund in the trustee's hands, the plaintiffs were by virtue of their lien entitled to payment out of the proceeds of the sale of the house and lot; and that they were so entitled in preference to the orders drawn after the levies made on 16 February, 1846. There was a decree accordingly, and for costs to the plaintiffs, and the defendants appealed.
The Court is of opinion that the decree is erroneous, and that the bill ought to have been dismissed.
It is to be remarked in the opening that the bill is not framed with a view to satisfaction out of this fund as the equitable property of the debtor. If it had been, there are two decisive objections to sustaining it: one, that it does not show that the debtor had no other property out of which satisfaction could have been obtained upon a legal execution; the other, that where the fund is equitable, so that an execution creates no lien on it at law, the debtor may assign, notwithstanding execution sued, until the judgment creditor ties his hands by filing a bill. Harrison v. Battle, 16 N.C. 537; McKay v. Williams, 21 N.C. 398; Kirkpatrick v. Means, ante, 220. The bill and the decree, however, do not proceed upon any such ground, but wholly on the idea that this interest of Rouche in the house and lot is such a legal estate as was liable to be sold on execution, and that the justice's execution and the proceedings on it created a lien on the property. The cause therefore depends upon the correctness of that proposition.
It is true, and was so held in Harrison v. Battle, supra, (254) and Pool v. Glover, 24 N.C. 129, that the resulting trust in such a case is substantially an equity of redemption within the meaning of the second section of the act of 1812, and therefore it might have been sold upon a fieri facias like any other lands or tenements of the debtor, and that writ binds it, or creates a lien on it, from the time of execution sued. Hall v. Harris, 38 N.C. 289. We agree, likewise, that when execution has been sued and a lien thereby created, the court of equity, as was said in Harrison v. Battle and McKay v. Williams, will entertain a bill asking it to exercise a jurisdiction ancillary to the law, and inquire into the encumbrance and clear the estate therefrom, or decree a sale under the direction of the court, and out of the proceeds satisfy the prior encumbrance, and then the demands of the execution creditors. For although the creditor may proceed at once to a sale under execution, because the statute gives him the power, yet it is most beneficial for all parties that the debtor's real interest, the value of the equity of redemption, may be ascertained by an inquiry into the amount and justice of the mortgage debts, and the estate brought to sale with a clear title. The whole question in the case is, then, whether the plaintiffs before their bill filed had obtained a lien, in a just and legal sense, by their executions. If they had, they would undoubtedly have been entitled to a decree to have a sale of the premises for their satisfaction; and if they had not such a lien, they could not have had a decree for a sale, and, of course, cannot have one for satisfaction out of its produce. It is a question, indeed, whether the lien, supposing it to have been created by executions and levies, would subsist after the sale of the whole property by the trustee; and, if so, whether it does not continue on the property itself and against the purchaser at the trustee's sale, rather than on the proceeds of that sale. But with none of these points are we disposed to meddle now, because we are of opinion (255) that, supposing the plaintiffs to have in this Court the same rights against the money in the hands of the trustee which they had against the equity of redemption in the house itself, they cannot have any relief, because we hold that the plaintiffs never had a lien on the property itself or the equity of redemption, and therefore can have no right to call for the proceeds of the sales, whether such proceeds be deemed the subject of either the legal or equitable demand of the maker of the deed. The term "lien" when used in reference to an execution, expresses the right of the creditor to obtain payment by force of that process by a sale of the debtor's property, so as to divest the property out of the debtor or his alienee. It may not only be created in presenti by suing the process, but it may by relation be carried back to a prior time, as from the teste or from the judgment. But to create the lien and to enforce it, it is indispensable that there should be effectual process such as will enable the creditor to make a sale of the property. That is always the case with a fieri facias duly issued from a court of record. But it is not so with respect to that process when issued by a justice of the peace. It only binds personal property from the time of the levy, and, in respect to land, it does not bind it at all, in the sense of enabling the creditor to have a sale under it. The statute directs that a justice of the peace shall not issue an execution immediately against land; but that it shall command the officer to make the money of the goods and chattels of the party cast, and, for want of goods and chattels, to levy on the lands and tenements. It further requires the officer to make return thereof, setting forth the money he has made of the goods, and what land he had levied on, and enacts that upon such return the land levied on shall by order of the county court be sold by the sheriff as on a venditioni exponas. When the order of sale is made in the county court, and is acted on by the plaintiff by duly suing execution thereof, it has been held that the lien has relation to the levy by the constable, determining the preference between other execution creditors, (256) whether they obtained judgments in or out of court. Lash v. Gibson, 5 N.C. 266; Huggins v. Ketchum, 20 N.C. 550. We doubt not that it has the like relation in restraint of the debtor's own alienation. But it would seem that there can be no relation for any purpose, nor any lien created by the execution of the justices merely, unless the party complete it by obtaining on it an order of the court to sell, and taking execution on the order, for until that be done it cannot be known that it ever will be done, or that it could be done. The debt may have been discharged, or it may be that the county courts may find such defects in the process or the return as will prevent the making of an order to sell. Until the order to sell and execution thereon, there is not such final process as will authorize the party to sell or create an effectual lien. But this case does not require even a rule to that extent to be laid down, because the plaintiffs have not only not issued nor obtained an award of execution, but it is clear that, upon the returns of the constable, they never can rightly obtain such order or process; for the return states a levy on certain personal property, and does not show any disposition of that, nor show that there is no other personal property; and on such a return the court ought not to make an order of sale, and, it is to be presumed, would not. Borden v. Smith, 20 N.C. 27; Henshaw v. Branson, 25 N.C. 298. It neither appears by the return nor even in the bill that the debtor's goods would not pay the debt; and therefore the plaintiffs do not entitle themselves to execution against the realty, much less show such an one as would authorize a sale. Consequently, they came here prematurely, at all events, and the decree must be reversed and the bill dismissed, with costs in both courts.
PER CURIAM. Reversed.
Cited: McRary v. Fries, 57 N.C. 236.